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Transcript of Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now 10 October 2012 Craig Lewis Executive Director Clean...
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now 10 October 2012
Craig LewisExecutive DirectorClean Coalition650-204-9768 office650-796-2353 [email protected]
California Biopower PolicyThe Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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Clean Coalition – Mission and Advisors
Clean Coalition – Mission and Advisors
Board of AdvisorsBoard of AdvisorsJeff Anderson
Co-founder and Former ED, Clean Economy Network
Josh BeckerGeneral Partner and Co-founder, New Cycle Capital
Jeff BrothersCEO, Sol Orchard
Jeffrey ByronVice Chairman National Board of Directors, Cleantech Open; Former California Energy
Commissioner (2006-2011)
Rick DeGoliaSenior Business Advisor, InVisM, Inc.
Mark FultonManaging Director, Global Head of Climate Change Investment Research, DB Climate Change Advisors,
a member of the Deutsche Bank Group
John GeesmanFormer Commissioner, California Energy
Commission
Patricia GlazaPrincipal, Arsenal Venture Partners; Former
Executive Director, Clean Technology and Sustainable Industries Organization
Amory B. LovinsChairman and Chief Scientist, Rocky Mountain
Institute
L. Hunter LovinsPresident, Natural Capitalism Solutions
Dan KammenDirector of the Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory at UC Berkeley; Former Chief Technical
Specialist for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency, World Bank
Fred KeeleyTreasurer, Santa Cruz County, and Former Speaker
pro Tempore of the California State Assembly
Felix KramerFounder, California Cars Initiative
Ramamoorthy RameshFounding Director, U.S. Department of Energy
SunShot Initiative
Governor Bill RitterDirector, Colorado State University’s Center for the
New Energy Economy, and Former Colorado Governor
Terry TamminenFormer Secretary of the California EPA and Special
Advisor to CA Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
Jim WeldonCEO, Solar Junction
R. James WoolseyChairman, Woolsey Partners, and Venture Partner,
Lux Capital;Former Director of Central Intelligence
Kurt YeagerVice Chairman, Galvin Electricity Initiative; Former
CEO, Electric Power Research Institute
MissionTo accelerate the transition to local energy systems through innovative policies and programs that
deliver cost-effective renewable energy, strengthen local economies, foster environmental sustainability, and enhance energy security
MissionTo accelerate the transition to local energy systems through innovative policies and programs that
deliver cost-effective renewable energy, strengthen local economies, foster environmental sustainability, and enhance energy security
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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Biopower in CA: way behind
• A number of CA programs exist for biopower and CHP, but they’re generally ineffective
Comparing Germany and California biopower markets (sources: CA Energy Commission; Germany’s BDEW).
• Other jurisdictions, particularly Germany, are leading the way with effective programs
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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California Biopower Programs & Critical Issues
Feed-In TariffAB 1613 (price ~7 cents/kWh)
AB 1969 (price ~10 cents/kWh, interconnection)
SB 32, SB 1122, SB 1332 (TBD on price and PPA, Resource Adequacy, Deliverability, Interconnection)
Request for Offer CHP RFO (only attracting massive projects ~40 MW and larger)
Self GenerationSGIP (impossible milestone timing, departing load charges 1-2.2 cents/kWh)
Interconnection, Resource Adequacy, and Deliverability are critical issues for all Wholesale Distributed Generation (WDG) projects
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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SB 32 all-renewables feed-in tariff
• Provides a feed-in tariff for any kind of RPS-eligible renewable technology up to 3 MW per project• Slated to go live early 2013• Prices will start at 8.923 c/kWh and will adjust up or down based on market interest• Will be a small program initially. Only about 200 MW is available because the previous AB 1969 directly decreases the SB 32 MW allocation• CPUC has suggested that the program cap may be expanded in the future• Projects must interconnect to the distribution grid and any network upgrades required must be less than $300k• Clean Coalition is still working to include Locational Benefits in pricing, which was in the CPUC staff proposal but removed in the final decision
CPUC analysis by E3 showing solar PV locational benefits at a sample SCE location, Sep2011.
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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SB 1122 modifies SB 32
• SB 1122 passed into law just last month• Adds a 250 MW biopower tranche to the existing 750 MW feed-in tariff program• Also allocates the 250 MW between specific biopower technologies• CPUC must implement by June 1, 2013• We don’t anticipate that this will lead to a delay in the SB 32 program (slated to be operational by Q1 2013), but it may• A good step in the right direction, but we have FAR more potential than this
Comparing Germany and California biopower markets (sources: CA Energy Commission; Germany’s BDEW).
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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SB 1332 also modifies SB 32
• SB 1332 also passed into law just last month• This was a “clean up” bill sponsored by the Clean Coalition• Requires that public utilities (rather than investor-owned utilities) implement SB 32 by July 1, 2013• There was previously no date for compliance so a lot of POUs have simply ignored it• The bill also requires that “locational benefits” of SB 32 projects be considered in developing the contract price
• This is a potential game changer for Wholesale DG in CA
Sacramento MUD (SMUD) is a leader in solar and energy efficiency AND has low rates
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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SB 1122 modifies SB 32
• SB 1122 requires the following allocation of the 250 additional MW for biopower technologies:
• 110 MW from wastewater treatment, municipal organic waste, food processing and codigestion
• 90 MW from dairy and other agricultural bioenergy
• 50 MW from byproducts of sustainable forest management
• Must be in areas designated by the Dept. of Forestry and Fire Protection
Comparing Germany and California biopower markets (sources: CA Energy Commission; Germany’s BDEW).
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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AB 1613 Cogen (CHP) feed-in tariff
• Cogeneration is where useable heat and electricity are produced by the same facility • AB 1613 provides a limited feed-in tariff for cogen-produced electricity (also known as combined heat and power or CHP)• Pricing formula is complicated but it will generally be about 5-7 c/kWh• Also provides a 10% adder for projects located in areas with local capacity requirements• CAISO posts local capacity info here: http://www.caiso.com/planning/Pages/ReliabilityRequirements/LocalCapacityRequirements.aspx• Was the subject of lengthy litigation at the CPUC and FERC• It’s still not clear whether this pricing level is sufficient to support new projects• NO AB 1613 contracts have been signed yet
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP)
• Designed to promote on-site generation of various types• Recent changes under SB 412 allow SGIP projects to be any size• But incentives only apply for the first 3 MW of any single project• Incentives drop by half for the 2nd MW and again by half for the 3rd MW• An example:
• 3 MW Biogas ICE• $2.50 ($2 biogas plus $.5 ICE) per watt for
the first MW, $1.25 for the 2nd, $.625 for the 3rd MW
• Total = $4.375 million total rebate• $5 million maximum incentive per project• Can elect to export up to 25% of annual production to the grid (“excess sales”)• Can be coupled with net-metering for the 1st MW of output
Technology Type Incentive ($/W)
Renewable and Waste Heat Capture Wind Turbine $1.25Bottoming-Cycle CHP $1.25Pressure Reduction Turbine $1.25Conventional Fuel-Based CHPInternal Combustion Engine – CHP $0.50
Microturbine – CHP $0.50Gas Turbine – CHP $0.50Emerging technologiesAdvanced Energy Storage $2.00Biogas $2.00Fuel Cell – CHP or Electric Only $2.25
Table 1 from CPUC D.11-09-015, Sep2011
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP)
• Proof of Project Milestone for SGIP can be a problem:
• 14 items have to submitted to the utility 60 days after a (non-public entity) project is awarded an SGIP Conditional Reservation Letter:
• Some of these documents and contracts won’t generally be completed that soon, so this can be a major problem
• In particular, the Executed Contract or Agreement for Installation will not generally be ready 60 days after a conditional reservation is provided b/c no project can proceed very far at all until it receives the Conditional Reservation Letter
• Similarly, the Air Pollution Permit Application may not be ready this fast Table 1 from CPUC D.11-09-015, Sep2011
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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New CHP program for 5 MW and over
• This is a relatively new CHP program that began in 2012• For example, PG&E is procuring 1,387 MW of new CHP, preferably from low GHG sources• First target is 630 MW• Projects must be 5 MW or larger• A bonus is available proportionate to GHG reduction, effectively a “biogas adder” similar to that in SGIP
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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New CHP program for 5 MW and over
• Annual RFOs, first in Feb. 2012, next in Feb. 2013• Track I, which is the first RFO, is for facilities that are already interconnected
• Track II, in 2013, will be for new facilities
• PG&E has only one new contract so far, for 280 MW, but for an existing facility
• 561 MW Los Medanos CHP facility was built in 2001, in Pittsburg, CA, and supplies process heat to a steel mill and a chemical processing facility
• Half of this power will be sold to PG&E once the CPUC approves the contract; other half to SCE
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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New CHP program for 5 MW and over
• SCE has contracted for over 700 MW of CHP from existing facilities, including the other half of the Los Medanos site (four have been posted on SCE’s website so far):
• SCE will, as with PG&E, issue their Track II proposal in 2013
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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Departing Load issues
• Non-bypassable charges are assessed for departing load in many circumstances• Various exceptions apply for renewables, including biogas• Biogas NBCs can in theory be reduced to about 1 c/kWh• However, you have to go through a process with the IOU to determine eligibility for reduced NBCs• Net-metered solar avoid most NBCs for the 1st MW and this should be the same for biogas• Clean Coalition is working on legislative solutions
Making Clean Local Energy Accessible Now
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Solutions to Ramping Biopower in Californai
Clean Local Energy Accessible Now (CLEAN) ProgramsStandard offer must-take procurementResource Adequacy (RA) preference for close-to-load and near-term projectsDeliverability preference for close-to-load and near-term projectsStreamlined interconnection with cost-averaging, and for superior sites, utility-paid upgrades on the distribution grid
Self-Gen 2.0Equal treatment on either side of the meter: PPA rate, interconnection, and importantly, unlinking of PPA rate to retail rateRemoves all issues associated with Net Metering, Departing Load Charges,
Clean Energy Now 5 GW CLEAN Program including Self-Gen 2.0 features and Location Bonuses
Fixed price contracts with Volumetric Price Adjustment on future contracts to ensure market responsiveness
Streamlined PPA contract to provide necessary terms but preempt gratuitous complexity
Provision for voltage regulation with appropriate compensation
Fulfills Governor Brown’s goal for 12 GW of clean local energy, in highest value locationsCompletely replaces the energy and voltage regulation lost from the failed San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station (SONGS), which is delivering zero energy, or other benefits, while costing California ratepayers $54 million per month
For updates on Clean Energy Now, register at www.clean-coalition.org